Many claimants start with good intentions: they gather discharge papers, search for old records, and talk with doctors about symptoms. But local life can create avoidable gaps—lost files, changing phone numbers, incomplete medical summaries, and inconsistent timelines between appointments.
In a Camp Lejeune-style case, the key issues are usually not whether you were treated. The issue is whether your records clearly support:
- Where you were during relevant periods
- What you were exposed to (and how exposure fits your timeline)
- Which conditions were diagnosed and when
- How medical evidence supports a connection between exposure and illness
A lawyer helps prevent the “almost there” problem—when important documents exist, but they aren’t assembled in a way that makes causation understandable.


